Inventor · Tolland, CT, US

Alexander J. Hart

18Patents
2h-index
20Co-inventors
43Inventor score

Filing activity: Jun 8, 2020 → May 17, 2023

Most-cited inventions

PatentTitleAreaCited byStatus
US11596400B2 Handheld electromechanical surgical system Human Necessities 4 Active
US11446037B2 Handheld electromechanical surgical system Human Necessities 3 Active
US11744592B2 Handheld electromechanical stapler with tissue thickness detection Human Necessities 2 Active
US11622768B2 Methods and structure for confirming proper assembly of powered surgical stapling systems Human Necessities 1 Active
US11653925B2 Tissue relaxation monitoring for optimized tissue stapling Human Necessities 1 Active
US11684362B2 Handheld electromechanical surgical system Human Necessities 0 Active
US11832823B2 Determination of anvil release during anastomosis Human Necessities 0 Active
US11771432B2 Stapling and cutting to default values in the event of strain gauge data integrity loss Human Necessities 0 Active
US12133651B2 Tissue relaxation monitoring for optimized tissue stapling Human Necessities 0 Active
US12213674B2 Determination of premature staple ejection Human Necessities 0 Active
US12329378B2 Handheld electromechanical surgical system Human Necessities 0 Active
US12161341B2 Slow speed staple and staple relaxation for stapling optimization Human Necessities 0 Active
US12251109B2 Handheld electromechanical surgical system Human Necessities 0 Active
US12029428B2 Methods and structure for confirming proper assembly of powered surgical stapling systems Human Necessities 0 Active
US11819208B2 Handheld electromechanical surgical device with strain gauge drift detection Human Necessities 0 Active
US11607224B2 Systems and methods for powered surgical circular stapling instrument rotation adjustment Human Necessities 0 Active
US12245767B2 Handheld electromechanical surgical system Human Necessities 0 Active
US12343016B2 Handheld electromechanical surgical system Human Necessities 0 Active

Source: USPTO / EPO open patent data. Inventor disambiguation is heuristic; counts are objective bibliographic measures.